It's always nice to read G. Bruce Boyer.
He talks about men's dress in an accessible and easygoing way and there's always something to learn from his musings. And he is as stylish a writer as you can find.
Published in December 2009 on Will's A Suitable Wardrobe, I came across this article again and borrowed (thank you gentlemen!) it to pass on to you in case you hadn't seen it earlier.
He makes a strong case for the English Country Look and I wouldn't disagree.
Guest Post: The English Country House Look
By G. Bruce Boyer
The Gothic Business Look (all laser-cut black suits and pointed shoes), the Made-in-America Blue Collar Look, the Neo-Japanese Preppy Look, the Neapolitan Relaxed Elegance Look. There are so many looks around these days to tempt a young man at the onset of his wardrobing life. What's a fella to do?
May I suggest taking one step forward by taking two steps backwards: the tried & true English Country House Look (ECHL). It's stood the test of time, has proven adaptable to virtually any body shape, continues to have enviable street creds, and can be worked and re-worked over and over infinitum.
In his distinctive book, On Decorating, Mark Hampton slyly puts his finger on the secret of the ECHL:
…rooms with old worn carpets and turn-of-the-century upholstered furniture which, instead of being newly reupholstered, is covered in loose slipcovers that look (and perhaps are) homemade. There are books everywhere and leather club fenders in front of smoke-streaked mantelpieces. This is commonly called the undecorated look. Sometimes it is the result of happenstance; sometimes a subtle effort has been made …
“Sometimes a subtle effort” would be a good title for a study of this subject that speaks to both interior design and to clothes. Since Mr. Hampton has noted the touchstones of the interior design genre, let's look at the salient points of the ECHL pertaining to clothes.
Aspirational gentility: the perceptive Ralph Lauren has, over these many years, firmly convinced us that our grandfathers all had mahogany-lined speedboats and polo ponies, even though they were in fact slaving away down some mine shaft or other. You can't beat the past as a commodity.
Disdain for technology: why would anyone bother with a Blackberry, cellphone, headsets, ipod, Kindle, or laptop when a simple Montblanc and Moleskin diary will suffice, and not ruin the lines of the suit. Let solitude be a time for thought.
Untidiness trumps symmetry and organization: consider Nancy Mitford's famous dictum: “All nice rooms are a bit shabby.” This applies to dress as well. Otherwise there's the suspicion of calculation.
A preference for the mildly tatty over the new and shiny. Flaunting new labels, or any labels for that matter, gives the impression of insecurity.
Comfort triumphs: never sacrifice a cozy, warm, homey feeling to fashionable trends. You don't have to.
Eccentric within reason is charming: we preach individuality, but how refreshing to actually see it. Wear the orange cashmere tie and purple socks with the navy suit, or a plastic shopping bag for a briefcase.
On the other hand, novelty is as unwelcome as excessive tidiness. Just because a person likes something is not a good enough reason to wear it. Denim dinner jackets and chinchilla bow ties are cute and whimsical. That's the problem.
Be sentimental: style is about attitude. Wearing Granddad's old pocket watch from a chain through your buttonhole is a perfect touch, even if the face keeps falling out of it.
But don't take my word for it. Just ask Ralph.
Guest author G. Bruce Boyer has been a noted fashion writer and editor for more than thirty-five years. He is the author of two books on the history and direction of men's fashion: Elegance (W. W. Norton & Company, New York, 1985) and Eminently Suitable (W. W. Norton & Company, New York, 1990). He is also the author of two books on the history of fashion in the cinema: Rebel Style: Cinematic Heroes of the Fifties (Assouline Press, 2006), and Fred Astaire Style (Assouline Press, 2005), a co-author of a three-volume study of American menswear in the 1930s entitled Apparel Arts (Gruppo GFT, Milan, 1989), and a contributor and consultant to The Encyclopedia of Clothing and Fashion (Charles’ Scribners’ Sons, 2004).
http://asuitablewardrobe.dynend.com/200 ... k.html?m=1
The English Country House Look
So be "at home". In your house, in your clothes.
Yes!
Yes!
Here is a nice example of the style: http://www.google.com.br/search?hl=en&s ... B640%3B436
- The historian the late A L Rowse, in his library in Trenarren House. The camellias were, no doubt, from his own gardens.
NJS
- The historian the late A L Rowse, in his library in Trenarren House. The camellias were, no doubt, from his own gardens.
NJS
I broadly agree with this concept (who wouldn't?) but I do think it can be taken too far into real shabbines and dismalness. The Brits, my beloved Brits, who invented this look (without, for a second, thinking of it as a "look") can be, at times, a bit slovenly.
To wit:
I did particularly like the injuction to "Be sentimental"
To wit:
No. Really, no.uppercase wrote:a plastic shopping bag for a briefcase.
I did particularly like the injuction to "Be sentimental"
Luca, I agree, the injunction is to "be sentimental" - that is, take the approach, not the exact "look". Allow oneself to be comfortable, idiosyncratic (without studied eccentricity), natural in a way - and apply all this to one's actual milieu, without necessarily importing the British one. Brits taken as an example, not as a canon to follow religiously.
Surely mainland Europe and the Americas have country houses, don't they? Even the modern European republics have their manors and castles still.Costi wrote:Luca, I agree, the injunction is to "be sentimental" - that is, take the approach, not the exact "look". Allow oneself to be comfortable, idiosyncratic (without studied eccentricity), natural in a way - and apply all this to one's actual milieu, without necessarily importing the British one. Brits taken as an example, not as a canon to follow religiously.
I am not sure why the country house look necessarily has to be 'English', unless the mix of oriental rugs, books, china, stuffed heads and lived-in furniture really is sui generis.
NJS
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As a continental immigrant to Britain, I must say there's a difference. It's hard to put a finger on, but certainly the fact that they haven't had a major land war in the last four centuries means the fabric of the country is quite intact, and the respect and veneration for old things really shines through. Let me put it like this: in Oxford, where I live, one can see a great many pillarboxes that date back to the Victorian era. In any other country, they would have been replaced by something more "efficient".
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Guilty here: I've sometimes employed bags from Fortnum & Mason, Penhaligon's and Ladurée to that effect. Come think of it, they all had come approximately in the same colour!Luca wrote:To wit:No. Really, no.uppercase wrote:a plastic shopping bag for a briefcase.
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